I’m not sure at all how Graham Norton is going to greet, much less treat, guest Mel Gibson, but it’ll be worth watching – especially with his Daddy’s Home 2 co-stars, Will Farrell and Mark Wahlberg, there for moral and comic support.

SERIES PREMIERE: This 10-part German series is produced, imported and presented today by Netflix, as part of its quest, in TV entertainment terms, of literal world domination. It’s a moody mystery genre thriller – think The Returned in global TV terms, or Twin Peaks: The Return closer to home – and is set in two distinct time periods: the very near future (2019) and the fairly distant past (1986), with a third time frame (1953) thrown in for good measure. And in a remote German

SEASON PREMIERE: Season 5 of this ABC Marvel series begins with a two-parter that is out of this world. Well, it’s in orbit, anyway, as Colson and his squad find themselves on a strange space ship, in orbit in outer space.

This new documentary special – part biography, part concert and performance retrospective – covers the 50-year career of Cat Stevens, the musician whose contributions to the film Harold & Maude, and his hugely popular introspective singer-songwriter LPs of the early Seventies, briefly put him at the top of the pop music business. Then he quit, to focus on his family and his faith, converted to Islam, and changed his name to Yusef. He returned to music, and recording, in the 2000s

John Cleese is hilarious in this 1988 comedy, playing a button-down British barrister named Archie Leach (Cary Grant’s real name, by the way). In this film, Cleese falls under the spell of a con woman played by Jamie Lee Curtis. She’s a riot, too – but as good as Cleese and Curtis are, they’re eclipsed by this film’s co-stars: Michael Palin as a stuttering villain, and Kevin Kline, who won an Oscar for his role here, as a short-tempered accomplice.